Westlaw Gulf Content & Coverage

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Westlaw Gulf Content & Coverage WESTLAW GULF CONTENT & COVERAGE As a subscriber to Westlaw Gulf, you will have access to the content listed below JUNE 2011 LEGISLATION Intellectual Property/Copyright Chamber of Commerce Dubai International Arbitration Centre Maritime International Treaties Charitable Organisations Dubai Investment Corporation Medical Content Coverage Labour Civil Aviation Dubai Metals and Commodities Centre Natural Resources UAE Laws 1970 - 2010 Legal Profession Civil & Construction Works Dubai Municipality Penal Description Maritime Civil Court Procedure Dubai Supply Authority Procurement Animal Welfare Media Civil Service Dubai World Real Estate Anti Money Laundering Medical Commercial Laws Dubai World Trade Centre Sharjah Electricity and Water Authority Armed Forces National Media Council Courts Economic Department Sharjah Government Auditing Profession National Transport Authority Department of Economic Development Education Sharjah Municipality Aviation Natural Resources Department of Municipal Affairs e-Government Supreme Council Central Bank Notary Public Education Electricity & Water Tax Charitable Organisations Penal Environmental Protection Emirates Airlines Tourism Civil Defence Personal Status Etihad Airways Energy Civil Service Emirate Laws: Ajman 1998 - 2008 Police and National Security Executive Affairs Environmental Protection Civil Transactions and Procedures Private Security Firms General Industry Corporation Executive Council Description Commercial Agencies Real Estate Government Finance Government Finance Ajman Government Company / Commercial Laws Telecommunications Local Government Legal Profession Ajman University Constitutional Traffic Laws Medical Local Government Civil & Construction Works Consular & Diplomatic Transport Oil Medical Commercial Licensing Consumer Protection Welfare Penal Meydan City Corporation Real Estate Education Presidential Flight Authority Penal Water & Electricity Emirates Identity Authority Emirate Laws: Abu Dhabi 1965 - 2010 Procurement Ports Emirates Investment Authority Real Estate Private Security Emirate Laws: Umm Al Quwain 1998 - 2009 Emirates Post Holding Group Description Tax Procurement Emirates Securities & Commodities Authority Abu Dhabi Airport Company Description Transport Real Estate Emirates Standardisation & Meteorological Abu Dhabi Companies Local Government Water & Electricity Real Estate Regulatory Agency Authority Abu Dhabi General Services Real Estate ZonesCorp Roads & Traffic Authority Environmental Protection Abu Dhabi Fund Tax Emirate Laws: Ras al-Khaimah 1969 - 2008 Federal Companies Abu Dhabi Accountability Authority Emirate Laws: Dubai 1960 - 2010 Tourism Federal Courts AD Council for Economic Development Description Transport Federal Customs AD Culture & Heritage Description Advertising Federal Electricity & Water AD Executive Council Charitable Organisations Civil & Construction Works Emirate Laws: Sharjah 1967 - 2009 Federal Government AD Food Control Agency Civil Service Company and Commercial Federal Judicial Authority AD Investment Authority Courts Description Courts Federal National Council AD Investment Council Dubai Chamber of Commerce Advertising Customs Federal Procurement AD Ports Company Dubai Civil Aviation Aviation Environment Federal Public Works Department AD Public Works Department Dubai Companies Chamber of Commerce Government Government Finance AD Securities Market Dubai Event Management Corporation Civil Service Health Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) AD Statistics Centre Dubai Financial Market Courts Legal Profession Immigration AD Tourism Authority Dubai Financial Support Fund Environmental Protection Notary Public Insurance Business Licensing Dubai International Airport Investment Ports Contact us for more information: Call 8000 440 338 (UAE Toll Free) or +44 (0) 20 3128 7779 (International), email [email protected] or visit westlawgulf.com WESTLAW GULF CONTENT & COVERAGE As a subscriber to Westlaw Gulf, you will have access to the content listed below JUNE 2011 Real Estate Fujairah Free Zone Utilities and Regulation Regulatory Agencies and Foreign Investment Inews Tax Jebel Ali Free Zone Real Estate Intellectual Property Intellectual Property / IT Telecommunications Ports and Customs (JAFZA) Construction Commercial Agency and Distribution Iraq Transport RAK Free Zone Environmental Law Labor Law Water & Electricity Sharjah Free Zones Employment and Labor Regulations Real Estate Iraq TECOM Commercial Agency, Distributorship, and Construction Jordan Emirate Laws: Fujairah 1966 - 2008 Franchising Commercial Insolvency and Bankruptcy Regimes Kingdom of Saudi Arabia CASES Intellectual Property Description Business Laws of the UAE Legal Frontiers Bankruptcy and Insolvency Advertising Content Coverage* Constitutional Law of the UAE Dispute Resolution Legislative Update Asia Energy Company UAE Cases 1976 - 2010 Corporations, Partnerships, and Other Business (by December 2011) Insurance Entities Litigation Chamber of Commerce Customs Law Securities and Capital Markets Litigation & Arbitration Civil Service Description Financial Institutions Commercial Companies DIFC Court of First Instance Business Laws of Lebanon London Calling Construction and Civil Constitutional Basis of Business Laws Labor and Employment Laws DIFC Court of Appeal Maritime, Aviation, Trade & Insurance Real Property Dibba Municipality DIFC Small Claims Tribunal Partnership, Corporation, and Other Business Insurance News Environment Dubai Court of Cassation Entities Intellectual Property Law Property Fujairah Companies Federal Court of Cassation Securities and Capital Markets FH Municipality Taxation Environmental Law Qatar Local Government Intellectual Property Litigation in the UAE BOOKS Saudi Arabia Real Estate Commercial Agency, Distribution, and Bankruptcy Content State Of The Nation Tax Franchising Other Matters Water & Electricity Business Laws of Kuwait and Qatar Financial Institutions Telecommunications Part 1 Doing Business in Kuwait Foreign Investment Review JOURNALS Freezone Laws 1970 - 2010 Employment and Labor Introduction to Kuwait Content Coverage CURRENT AWARENESS Corporate Formation Charities and Not-for-Profit Organizations Al Tamimi Law Update Continuously Growing Description Taxation Real Estate Law Content Coverage Abu Dhabi Media Zone Description Commercial Agencies Environmental Law Editorial Coverage Last 90 days Ajman Free Zone Arbitration Employment and Labor Construction DIFC Courts Banking & Finance Doing Business with Government Description DIFC - DFSA Rules Part 2 Doing Business in Qatar Client Focus Insolvency and Bankruptcy DIFC Legislation Introduction to Qatar Construction & Engineering Continual development DIFC Regulations Constitution and Governance of Qatar Business Laws of Saudi Arabia Corporate & Commercial Current Awareness Dubai Airport Free Zone Corporate Entities and Setting Up a Constitutional Basis of Business Laws Difc Legislation Dubai Healthcare City Business in Qatar Corporations, Partnerships, and Other Business Dispute Resolution Cases Dubai Maritime City Financial Institutions/Securities and Capital Entities Events Dubai Metals & Commodities Centre Free Zone Markets/Regulations Securities and Capital Markets Family Business Practice Official and non-official publications Dubai Silicon Oasis Taxation Taxation General Press coverage * Not all subject areas are covered by all years Contact us for more information: Call 8000 440 338 (UAE Toll Free) or +44 (0) 20 3128 7779 (International), email [email protected] or visit westlawgulf.com WESTLAW GULF NEWS COVERAGE As a subscriber to Westlaw Gulf, you will have access to the content listed below JUNE 2011 MIDDLE EAST Iranian Company News Bites - Market Report Iran Current News Source Regional Coverage Frequency Iranian Company News Bites - 7 days (UAE) UAE Five days a week Stock Report Iran Current ADP Middle East & Africa News Middle East Continuous feed Iranian Students News Agency (ISNA) Iran Current Al Arabiya Saudi Arabia Current Islamic Banking & Finance Middle East Every two months Al Bawaba News From Middle East Islamic Finance News Middle East Weekly and Africa Oman Five days a week Israel Faxx Israel Current Aljazeera.net Qatar Daily Israeli Company News Bites - AME Info - Appointments UAE Five days a week Market Report Israel Current AME Info - Aviation Oman Five days a week Israeli Company News Bites - Stock Report Israel Current AME Info - Banking Middle East Five days a week Jerusalem Post (Israel) Israel Six days a week AME Info - Company news Oman Continuous feed Jordan News Agency (Petra) Jordan Current AME Info - Dubai Property UAE Current Khaleej Times UAE Daily AME Info - Energy Oil and Gas Oman Five days a week Kippreport Middle East Current AME Info - Executive Motoring Oman Five days a week Kurdish Globe, The Iraq Weekly AME Info - Finance and Economy Oman Five days a week Kuwait News Agency (KUNA) Kuwait Daily AME Info - Manufacturing and Industry Middle East Current Kuwait Times Kuwait Daily AME Info - Middle East News Middle East Five days a week Kuwaiti Company News Bites - AME Info - Real Estate Oman Five days a week Market Report Kuwait Five days a week AME Info - Research and Studies Middle East Current Kuwaiti Company News Bites - Results Kuwait Current AME Info - Telecoms Oman Five days a week Kuwaiti Company News Bites - AME Info - Transport and Logistics Middle East Five days a week Sector Report Kuwait Daily AME Info - UAE News UAE Five days a week Kuwaiti Company News Bites - Andy McTiernan Property Stock Report Kuwait
Recommended publications
  • Dubai Review 2020 – 2021 Outlook
    Dubai Review Outlook www.valustrat.com ValuStrat Price Index – VPI Dubai Residential Base: January 2014=100 ValuStrat Price Index – VPI Dubai Office Base: January 2015=100 All prices are quoted in UAE Dirhams unless otherwise stated Sales and Rent performance are measured on a quarterly basis while hotel performance are on yearly basis 2020 Review FIRST QUARTER REVIEW 2020 VPI Residential VPI Residential VPI Office Capital Values Rental Values Capital Values 73.3 69.6 63.1 -10.1% -8.9% -14.7% Y-o-Y Y-o-Y Y-o-Y Residential Ready Residential Ready Ticket Size Sales Volume 1.71m 3,491 AED Transactions 0.6% -0.3% Q-o-Q Q-o-Q Residential Off-Plan Residential Off-Plan Ticket Size Sales Volume 1.45m 5,224 AED Transactions -8.6% -26.3% Q-o-Q Q-o-Q Office Sales Office Sales Office Ticket Size Volume Rent 0.92m 269 863 per sq m AED Transactions AED -17.9% 11.2% -5.2% Q-o-Q Q-o-Q Q-o-Q Jan COVID - 19 PANDEMIC • The VPI – residential capital values for Dubai as of March 2020 stood at 73.3 points, dipping 0.9% since February, -10% annually. 1W • First confirmed case in the UAE recorded on 29th January • The Dubai VPI for residential rental values during Q1 2020 stood at 69.6 points, • Suspension of all flights except cargo, halting operation of major public mass declining 1.7% quarterly and 8.9% annually. On an annual basis, apartment and transport (Dubai Metro and Tram) villa asking rents fell 9.4% and 8% respectively • Countrywide curfew and disinfection drive started • VPI for Dubai’s office capital values stood at 63.1 points, suggesting that
    [Show full text]
  • United Arab Emirates
    FREEDOM ON THE NET 2016 United Arab Emirates 2015 2016 Population: 9.2 million Not Not Internet Freedom Status Internet Penetration 2015 (ITU): 91 percent Free Free Social Media/ICT Apps Blocked: Yes Obstacles to Access (0-25) 14 14 Political/Social Content Blocked: Yes Limits on Content (0-35) 22 22 Bloggers/ICT Users Arrested: Yes Violations of User Rights (0-40) 32 32 TOTAL* (0-100) 68 68 Press Freedom 2016 Status: Not Free * 0=most free, 100=least free Key Developments: June 2015 – May 2016 • Authorities issued blocking orders against several overseas news websites over the past year, including Middle East Eye, The New Arab, and al-Araby al-Jadeed for unfavorable coverage of the country’s human rights abuses. Two Iran-based news sites were also blocked in a reflection of mounting tensions between the two countries (seeBlocking and Filtering). • A July 2015 law designed to combat discrimination and hate speech also outlines jail terms of six months to over 10 years and fines from US$ 14,000-550,000 for online posts deemed to insult “God, his prophets, apostles, holy books, houses of worship, or grave- yards” (see Legal Environment). • In June 2015, Nasser al-Faresi was sentenced to three years in jail for tweets found to have insulted the Federal Supreme Court and the ruler of Abu Dhabi. The court convicted him of “spreading rumors and information that harmed the country” (see Prosecutions and Detentions for Online Activities). • Academic and activist Dr. Nasser Bin Ghaith was arrested and held incommunicado until April 2016, when it was announced he was held on numerous charges, including “com- mitting a hostile act against a foreign state” for tweets that criticized Egypt’s treatment of political detainees (see Prosecutions and Detentions for Online Activities).
    [Show full text]
  • Urban Megaprojects-Based Approach in Urban Planning: from Isolated Objects to Shaping the City the Case of Dubai
    Université de Liège Faculty of Applied Sciences Urban Megaprojects-based Approach in Urban Planning: From Isolated Objects to Shaping the City The Case of Dubai PHD Thesis Dissertation Presented by Oula AOUN Submission Date: March 2016 Thesis Director: Jacques TELLER, Professor, Université de Liège Jury: Mario COOLS, Professor, Université de Liège Bernard DECLEVE, Professor, Université Catholique de Louvain Robert SALIBA, Professor, American University of Beirut Eric VERDEIL, Researcher, Université Paris-Est CNRS Kevin WARD, Professor, University of Manchester ii To Henry iii iv ACKNOWLEDGMENTS My acknowledgments go first to Professor Jacques Teller, for his support and guidance. I was very lucky during these years to have you as a thesis director. Your assistance was very enlightening and is greatly appreciated. Thank you for your daily comments and help, and most of all thank you for your friendship, and your support to my little family. I would like also to thank the members of my thesis committee, Dr Eric Verdeil and Professor Bernard Declève, for guiding me during these last four years. Thank you for taking so much interest in my research work, for your encouragement and valuable comments, and thank you as well for all the travel you undertook for those committee meetings. This research owes a lot to Université de Liège, and the Non-Fria grant that I was very lucky to have. Without this funding, this research work, and my trips to UAE, would not have been possible. My acknowledgments go also to Université de Liège for funding several travels giving me the chance to participate in many international seminars and conferences.
    [Show full text]
  • The World at Your Feet. Info@Messe–Me.Com Tel
    The venue The Dubai International Convention and Exhibition Centre has become the most successful venue in the Middle East. With its state of the art facilities, its easy access to and from the airport, shops, restaurants and hotels, it is the ideal setting for the DOMOTEX middle east 2006 carpets and floor coverings exhibition. Dubai - Centre of industrial development The development of the first Free Zone 20 years ago was an important step in creating the future of Dubai. Today, the Jebel Ali Free Zone is the biggest Free Zone in the Middle East with more than 8,000 registered companies. Newer Free Zones such as Media City, Internet City and Knowledge Village are rapidly growing due to the increase in demand from the outside world. Soon, Dubai will develop Free Zones for publishing, printing, manufacturing and Bio-technology to meet the needs of its consumers as well as to maintain its key position amongst rest of the world. The city has a healthy mixture of small and middle-sized businesses as well as wholesale and retail on many different levels. Dubai actually hosts more than one million people from over 130 different countries, with an expatriate rate of more than 70 percent. What has assisted in the region's growth is a newly formed law, enabling expatriates to purchase their own property. This has increased the number of investors and expatriates establishing their private homes here in the UAE, from all over the world. Booking details Space only – USD $315 per square metre. Shell Scheme – USD $365 per square metre.
    [Show full text]
  • The Future of US Relations with the Gulf States
    The Approaching Turning Point: The Future of U.S. Relations with the Gulf States By F. Gregory Gause, III Brookings Project on U.S. Policy Towards the Islamic World Analysis Paper Number Two, May 2003 1 Executive Summary United States policy toward the Gulf Cooperation Council states (Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and Oman) is in the midst of an important change. Saudi Arabia has served as the linchpin of American military and political influence in the Gulf since Desert Storm. It can no longer play that role. After the attacks of September 11, 2001, an American military presence in the kingdom is no longer sustainable in the political system of either the United States or Saudi Arabia. Washington therefore has to rely on the smaller Gulf monarchies to provide the infrastructure for its military presence in the region. The build-up toward war with Iraq has accelerated that change, with the Saudis unwilling to cooperate openly with Washington on this issue. No matter the outcome of war with Iraq, the political and strategic logic of basing American military power in these smaller Gulf states is compelling. In turn, Saudi-American relations need to be reconstituted on a basis that serves the shared interests of both states, and can be sustained in both countries’ political systems. That requires an end to the basing of American forces in the kingdom. The fall of Saddam Hussein will facilitate this goal, allowing the removal of the American air wing in Saudi Arabia that patrols southern Iraq. The public opinion benefits for the Saudis of the departure of the American forces will permit a return to a more normal, if somewhat more distant, cooperative relationship with the United States.
    [Show full text]
  • Dubai, UAE Fact Sheet Vision Without Action Is Merely a Dream
    Dubai, UAE Fact Sheet Vision without action is merely a dream. Action without vision just passes the time. Vision with action can change the world. – Joel Barker Did you know that…? ♦ Dubai is on target for 11% annual growth in 2007 ♦ Dubai is strategically placed between key financial hubs in Asia with Hong Kong to the East and Europe to the West ♦ Dubai is roughly the same size as Rhode Island ♦ Two UAE women executives feature in the top ten most powerful Arab businesswomen, according to a Forbes survey ♦ Emirates Airlines is Boeing’s biggest customer and will become the world’s largest long‐haul carrier by 2012 ♦ The UAE posts the lowest software piracy rate in the region for the past 10 years ♦ Emaar Properties is the largest real‐estate company in the world in terms of market capitalization ♦ Dubai contains an 80‐meter indoor ski slope in the middle of the desert ♦ Dubai opened the first gold exchange in the Middle East ♦ More than 40 television stations broadcast from UAE ♦ The UAE‐USA Defense Cooperation Agreement was enacted in 1994 ♦ UAE Ports host more US Navy Ships than any port outside the USA ♦ Emaar’s Burj Dubai will be the world’s tallest building at 2,300 ft. when completed ♦ The spacious luxury of Jumeirah’s Burj al‐Arab’s 27 double‐height stories make it the world’s tallest hotel and the world’s only “seven‐star” hotel ♦ UAE boasts the highest travel and tourism economic activity per capita in the world ♦ At 78 years, life expectancy has reached levels comparable to Europe and North America ♦ Dubai contains extravagant
    [Show full text]
  • United Arab Emirates (Uae)
    Library of Congress – Federal Research Division Country Profile: United Arab Emirates, July 2007 COUNTRY PROFILE: UNITED ARAB EMIRATES (UAE) July 2007 COUNTRY اﻟﻌﺮﺑﻴّﺔ اﻟﻤﺘّﺤﺪة (Formal Name: United Arab Emirates (Al Imarat al Arabiyah al Muttahidah Dubai , أﺑﻮ ﻇﺒﻲ (The seven emirates, in order of size, are: Abu Dhabi (Abu Zaby .اﻹﻣﺎرات Al ,ﻋﺠﻤﺎن Ajman , أ مّ اﻟﻘﻴﻮﻳﻦ Umm al Qaywayn , اﻟﺸﺎرﻗﺔ (Sharjah (Ash Shariqah ,دﺑﻲّ (Dubayy) .رأس اﻟﺨﻴﻤﺔ and Ras al Khaymah ,اﻟﻔﺠﻴﺮة Fajayrah Short Form: UAE. اﻣﺮاﺗﻰ .(Term for Citizen(s): Emirati(s أﺑﻮ ﻇﺒﻲ .Capital: Abu Dhabi City Major Cities: Al Ayn, capital of the Eastern Region, and Madinat Zayid, capital of the Western Region, are located in Abu Dhabi Emirate, the largest and most populous emirate. Dubai City is located in Dubai Emirate, the second largest emirate. Sharjah City and Khawr Fakkan are the major cities of the third largest emirate—Sharjah. Independence: The United Kingdom announced in 1968 and reaffirmed in 1971 that it would end its treaty relationships with the seven Trucial Coast states, which had been under British protection since 1892. Following the termination of all existing treaties with Britain, on December 2, 1971, six of the seven sheikhdoms formed the United Arab Emirates (UAE). The seventh sheikhdom, Ras al Khaymah, joined the UAE in 1972. Public holidays: Public holidays other than New Year’s Day and UAE National Day are dependent on the Islamic calendar and vary from year to year. For 2007, the holidays are: New Year’s Day (January 1); Muharram, Islamic New Year (January 20); Mouloud, Birth of Muhammad (March 31); Accession of the Ruler of Abu Dhabi—observed only in Abu Dhabi (August 6); Leilat al Meiraj, Ascension of Muhammad (August 10); first day of Ramadan (September 13); Eid al Fitr, end of Ramadan (October 13); UAE National Day (December 2); Eid al Adha, Feast of the Sacrifice (December 20); and Christmas Day (December 25).
    [Show full text]
  • ISSUE 4 ® the Newsletter Designed for Nexis.Com Power Users FOURTH QUARTER
    LexisNexis® Corporate Information Professional Update ISSUE 4 ® The newsletter designed for nexis.com power users FOURTH QUARTER What’s new at nexis.com®, plus searching strategies to help “power users” solve the information issues their businesses face. Full-text features: New biographical group sources on executives trim The new current-awareness tool developed your research time and compile results specifically for small to midsize organizations … LexisNexis now offers four new group sources at nexis.com® and lexis.com® LexisNexis® Publisher … 12:62 that provide detailed biographical information on company executives, New biographical group sources on executives employees and government leaders. trim your research time and compile results … 12:65 One search covers 20+ executive biographical sources The Executive Directories provides biographical information on directors and executives of major corporations in the United States and Europe. Search by executive name, company, city/state or a variety of other sections. Find summaries and/or links to full-text PDFs of: Review the sources available through The Executive Directories. One million phone numbers added to Search results are presented in standard nexis.com group source format, LexisNexis® Public Records sources … 12:56 with a left navigation pane that allows you to focus in on specific publications within the results. Trademark prosecution history now included with registration documents … 12:56 Get people news plus biographical stories in one source Biographies Plus News adds people-related news sources and selected ® LexisNexis Company Dossier: Search by biographical stories, obituaries and business-related stories covering ® radius or Fortune designation … 12:56 company executives from the News, All (English, Full Text) source.
    [Show full text]
  • Energy in Jordan a Youth Perspective Position Paper
    Energy in Jordan A Youth Perspective Position Paper A joint project between Friedrich Ebert Stiftung, Germanwatch and the Written by: Green Generation Foundation Amjad Khashman Kareem Shukri Qusai Al-Abbassi Mohammad Aliwat Ehab Al-Amleh Sewar Taweel Safa Al-Momani Sarah Haddadin Leen Baddar Yousef Awawdeh “Young people are not just the leaders of tomorrow; they are the leaders of today […] Young men and women like you are bringing new energy, creativity and dynamism to labor markets, to schools, to universities like this one [University of Jordan], to government, and – I hope – to diplomacy and international relations.” - UN Secretary General Ban-Ki Moon in Amman 2016 - [LW1] The impacts of climate change can already be felt across the world and are becoming more severe as the global average temperature rises. Countries all over the world are engaged in a race against time to tackle the global climate crisis. Limiting global warming implies reconsidering almost all elements of our daily life, most of which are connected to the energy sector: water, food, buildings, transportation, global trade, etc. The energy sector is the largest source of global greenhouse gas emissions through its burning of fossil fuels to generate electricity, produce heat or power engines, which directly causes climate change. However, as technologies rapidly improve and prices drop, many renewable energy options have emerged as an alternative to fossil fuels. Promoting renewable energy and energy efficiency is now an important part of the international climate debate and national energy policy in many countries, both of which are aimed at slowing down climate change.
    [Show full text]
  • So Close, So Far. National Identity and Political Legitimacy in UAE-Oman Border Cities
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Open Research Exeter So Close, So Far. National Identity and Political Legitimacy in UAE-Oman Border Cities Marc VALERI University of Exeter This manuscript is the version revised after peer-review and accepted for publication. This manuscript has been published and is available in Geopolitics: Date of publication: 26 December 2017 DOI: 10.1080/14650045.2017.1410794 Webpage: http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14650045.2017.1410794 1 Introduction Oman-United Arab Emirates border, Thursday 5 May 2016 early morning. As it has been the case for years on long weekends and holidays, endless queues of cars from Oman are waiting to cross the border in order to flock to Dubai for Isra’ and Miraj break 1 and enjoy attractions and entertainment that their country does not seem to offer. Major traffic congestions are taking place in the Omani city of al-Buraymi separated from the contiguous United Arab Emirates city of al-Ayn by the international border. Many border cities are contiguous urban areas which have been ‘dependent on the border for [their] existence’ or even ‘came into existence because of the border’. 2 Usually once military outposts (Eilat/Aqaba, on the Israel-Jordan border 3), they developed on either side of a long established border (Niagara Falls cities, on the Canada-USA border) after a border had been drawn (Tornio, on the Sweden-Finland border; 4 cities on the Mexico-USA and China- Russia 5 borders). Furthermore, split-up cities which were partitioned after World War II, including in Central Europe (e.g.
    [Show full text]
  • Gulf Affairs
    Autumn 2016 A Publication based at St Antony’s College Identity & Culture in the 21st Century Gulf Featuring H.E. Salah bin Ghanem Al Ali Minister of Culture and Sports State of Qatar H.E. Shaikha Mai Al-Khalifa President Bahrain Authority for Culture & Antiquities Ali Al-Youha Secretary General Kuwait National Council for Culture, Arts and Letters Nada Al Hassan Chief of Arab States Unit UNESCO Foreword by Abdulaziz Saud Al-Babtain OxGAPS | Oxford Gulf & Arabian Peninsula Studies Forum OxGAPS is a University of Oxford platform based at St Antony’s College promoting interdisciplinary research and dialogue on the pressing issues facing the region. Senior Member: Dr. Eugene Rogan Committee: Chairman & Managing Editor: Suliman Al-Atiqi Vice Chairman & Partnerships: Adel Hamaizia Editor: Jamie Etheridge Chief Copy Editor: Jack Hoover Arabic Content Lead: Lolwah Al-Khater Head of Outreach: Mohammed Al-Dubayan Communications Manager: Aisha Fakhroo Broadcasting & Archiving Officer: Oliver Ramsay Gray Research Assistant: Matthew Greene Copyright © 2016 OxGAPS Forum All rights reserved Autumn 2016 Gulf Affairs is an independent, non-partisan journal organized by OxGAPS, with the aim of bridging the voices of scholars, practitioners, and policy-makers to further knowledge and dialogue on pressing issues, challenges and opportunities facing the six member states of the Gulf Cooperation Council. The views expressed in this publication are those of the author(s) and do not necessar- ily represent those of OxGAPS, St Antony’s College, or the University of Oxford. Contact Details: OxGAPS Forum 62 Woodstock Road Oxford, OX2 6JF, UK Fax: +44 (0)1865 595770 Email: [email protected] Web: www.oxgaps.org Design and Layout by B’s Graphic Communication.
    [Show full text]
  • Democratic Reform in Jordan?
    Policy Paper Democratic Reform in Jordan? Calls for political reform in Jordan have come at a time when there is no popular political pressure or Expectations After the protest movement in the streets, as was the case during the Arab Spring, and - unexpectedly - after the parliamentary elections. King’s Recent Call to Review As a result, political elites have developed various theories to explain the timing of these Political Life calls and the hidden motives behind them. Of course, this also raises the usual questions about whether there was in fact a genuine and serious intent to move further towards a democratic transition, which seems to have stalled and perhaps even been reversed, Muhammad Abu Rumman with regard to Jordan’s ranking March 2021 for democratic institutions and international human rights. 1 Democratic Reform in Jordan? Expectations After the King’s Recent Call to Review Political Life Muhammad Abu Rumman March 2021 2 Published in 2021 by Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, Jordan & Iraq FES Jordan & Iraq P.O. Box 941876 Amman 11194 Jordan Email: [email protected] Website: www.fes-jordan.org Not for Sale © Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung Resident Director: Tim O. Petschulat All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reprinted, reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means without prior written permission from the publishers. The views and opinions expressed in this publication are solely those of the original author. They do not necessarily represent those of the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung. • Cover and internal design: Kamal Qasim Contents Contents Introduction 5 Historical Review: A Faltering Democracy 7 Determinants and Restrictions on Democratic Transition 10 Discussing Political Reform Today 14 Prospects for Political Transformation 17 Conclusion 19 Bibliography 21 4 Introduction 1 Introduction In an interview with the Jordan News Agency in the number of seats won by the Islamist on 30 January 2021, King Abdullah II spoke opposition, which makes up the largest about reviewing Jordanian laws governing political party in Jordan.
    [Show full text]